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Showing posts with the label Abstinence

28 Days of Abstinence - Day 27 - Finding Awakeness

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"Awakeness is found in our pleasure and our pain, our confusion and our wisdom, available in each moment of our weird, unfathomable, ordinary everyday lives."  -- Pema Chodron Awakeness, I believe, can be found in abstinence because it stimulates our pain and our pleasure sensors, it causes us confusion and discomfort, it causes us to feel more deeply, to be more aware, to wake up a little bit more. As I wrote on DAY 24 , abstaining from wheat has somehow allowed me to recognize the unwell feelings I have when I eat corn and sugar. I think this comes from the heightened sense of "awakeness" it takes to remain abstinent. And because I am more awake, I am more aware. How have you become more awake over the course of this challenge? What other moments of awakeness have you experienced in your weird, unfathomable life?

28 Days of Abstinence - Day 26 - Inconsistently, Honestly, Human

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Nature: inconsistently, honestly, beautiful "To be honest, one  must  be inconsistent."   –HG Wells This seemed the perfect quote to follow on from yesterday's theme of " progress, not perfection ." The idea of progress and not perfection, of taking things one step at a time and leaving room for backsliding and imperfection, has been crucial to my own personal growth and spiritual journey.  As a young child I became enamored with the idea of being perfect. I believed that if I always sat up straight, always listened to the teacher, always did my best and always got good grades, that would be make me "a good girl" and everyone would love me.  Of course it is not always possible to always sit up straight, always listen to the teacher, always do your best, and always get good grades, but I made a pretty good show of it by subjugating my feelings and acting the part.  I tried to do the same thing as a young mother - though...

28 Days of Abstinence - Day 25 - Progress not Perfection

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"When I leave my apartment I always whisper to myself, do no harm. I seek progress rather than perfection. I wouldn’t recognize perfection if it bit me on my ass. I just try to do better than I did yesterday."  --Frank Ferrante, subject of the movie " May I Be Frank ," an amazing example of the benefits of abstinence. (Check it out above!)

28 Days of Abstinence - Day 24 - Get passionate!

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"When one is passionate about a pursuit, one doesn't have to rely on forced discipline." --Susan Vreeland As this challenge goes on I am uncovering more and more things that I need to abstain from. Somehow by letting go of wheat, I have come to realize that I also need to cut down on/cut out sugar and corn. Just typing that makes me feel a little bit hopeless. I want to whine at The Universe, "Haven't I given up enough?!" But the answer, clearly, is "No."   Not even for any spiritual reasons. (I didn't give up wheat for spiritual reasons, although I believe the process of abstaining from anything can be spiritual practice.) Somehow by abstaining from wheat I have been able to notice more clearly how my body reacts to sugar and corn - and the results are not good. Although the reaction is not as strong as my reaction to the Pop Tarts I ate before I began the challenge , I do feel unwell after eating sugar and corn. Do I like ...

28 Days of Abstinence - Day 23 - Discover the Ultimate Happiness of the Human Soul (and then share it with others...)

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"For Socrates...happiness...does not depend on external circumstances or material resources, but on one's capacity to know what is good and true and to act accordingly. The philosopher's task is to lead the mind through its habitual patterns of deluded thinking to this life-altering knowledge. Having accomplished this for himself, he then becomes a compassionate 'gadfly' for others, pestering them to break through their false and limiting preconceptions so that they, too, can discover the ultimate happiness of the human soul." -- Noelle Oxenhandler

28 Days of Abstinence - Day 22 - Outwitting Your Shadowy Behavior

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"Having obscene amounts of money, power and status is just one kind of success. (And often a rather boring one at that.) Far more intriguing are the triumphs that come from outwitting one's own shadowy behavior and unconscious habits and from dreaming up ingenious responses to life's ever-fresh stream of problems. To accomplish these sorts of victories, there's no greater asset than a robust imagination." -- Rob Brezsny Following on from yesterday's post a question:  How can you use your imagination to support your abstinence practice?  Yesterday we  imagined that it was easy , how else could you use your imagination to help you sustain your abstinence practice? How can you outwit your shadowy behavior? For me this means not allowing my  questioning and rationalizing  voices (the ones that say,  "Do I really need to give this up?"  or  "I'll just have a little" ) to take up any space in my head. It means shutting them down ...

28 Days of Abstinence - Day 19 - Stop Being an Octopus

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"You can strip yourself, you can be stripped, but still you will reach out like an octopus to seek your own comfort, your untroubled time, your ease, your refreshment. It may mean books or music – the gratification of the inner senses – or it may mean food and drink, coffee and cigarettes. The one kind of giving up is not easier than the other."  --Dorothy Day in  The SUN magazine Click here to read an old post about a time I reached out to seek my own comfort and regretted it.

28 Days of Abstinence - Day 18 - Avoiding the Realities

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Even a tree as tall as this one once was is not permanent, AND from this stump now grows a brand new tree "We all develop addictions as a way of avoiding the realities of impermanence and loss."  --Satya Robyn Impermanence and loss. These are  the realities of our human life. And they are hard realities to live with day in and day out for decades (if we are lucky). I agree with Satya that it is out of avoiding these realities that we develop addictions and, ironically, I have found that it is only in facing these realities on a daily basis that we can begin to let our addictions go. Facing the realities of life and beginning to absorb the fact of impermanence and loss, the constant shifting and changing, the impossibility of ever really grasping and holding onto anything (a job, a relationship, a friend, a home) is what ultimately allows us to begin to let go of our addictions and to truly enjoy our lives, every precious fleeting moment. Today I invite you to ask yo...

20 Days of Abstinence - Day 17 - Choose Serenity

"Do I want the hit or do I want the serenity?"  --A friend of Anne Lamott's in  Operating Instructions Leave it to Anne Lamott - and her merry band of quotable friends - to tell it like it is. If you are feeling tempted today ask yourself this question: Do I want the hit or do I want the serenity? If you need some support today, click here to read a great article on giving up drinking. Take each principle she outlines and apply it to whatever it is you are abstaining from. Having a plan can help improve your chances of success.

28 Days of Abstinence - Day 15 - Some Thoughts About Addiction

"An addict is someone whose actions while (or after) doing FILL IN THE BLANK harm themselves or those around them." --Unknown Now that we have a few days of abstinence under our belts, or at least attempts at abstinence, I want to spend a few days exploring the topic of addiction. When I think of the word ADDICTION it is in all-caps and with a lot of baggage attached, which is why I really like the definition above - it covers all manner of addictions from the smallest unhealthy attachment to, for instance, hair twirling (guilty!) or gum chewing, up to full-blown drug and alcohol addiction. In fact, the original version of this quote was: "An alcoholic is someone whose actions while (or after) drinking harm themselves or those around them,"  but I think it works well for pretty much anything (food, substance, or behavior) as long as the harm clause is met. When I first heard this definition - in a conversation with someone and I am so sorry that I cannot ...

28 Days of Abstinence - Day 14 - Listen to Your Body

"Your body speaks to you. LISTEN."   --Inna Segal Try connecting with your body again today through this meditation . What is the message your body has for you today?

28 Days of Abstinence - Day 13 - Tread a New Way

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"Your usual way of behaving has for once not worked and has got you into an unpleasant situation. Your usual problem solving strategy is not improving the situation, no matter how much you try. For a change, try dropping your usual approach and tread a new way!" --Julien Avram, www.dailyhoroscopes.net  We decide to abstain because our old ways of eating, behaving or moving in the world are no longer working and we have gotten ourselves into some kind of an unpleasant situation. Abstinence is helping us tread a new way. Even if we return to the thing we are abstaining from fifteen days from now, it will be different because we will be different. The act of abstaining changes us and changes our relationship to our habit. Keep treading a new way and be amazed at what happens!